3.9 Article

Encapsulation technique efficiency in high zinc chloride concentration clayey soil with traditional agents

Journal

ENGENHARIA SANITARIA E AMBIENTAL
Volume 27, Issue 3, Pages 607-616

Publisher

ASSOC BRASILEIRA ENGENHARIA SANITARIA AMBIENTAL
DOI: 10.1590/S1413-415220200241

Keywords

encapsulation; contaminated soil; leaching; remediation; microstructural analysis

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This study evaluates the encapsulation technique efficiency of clayey soil contaminated with 5% and 10% of zinc chloride using lime and cement. The study finds that both encapsulating agents increase the soil strength, reduce the contaminant concentration, and enhance the mechanical behavior and the capability of zinc chloride retention.
Although the encapsulation technique has been used in environmental remediation for over three decades, there are few studies evaluating its efficacy for high contaminant concentrations. Therefore, this study aims to evaluate the encapsulation technique efficiency of clayey soil contaminated with 5% and 10% of zinc chloride, using lime and cement. Chemical, mechanical, mineralogical, and microscopic analyses were performed for pure, contaminated, and encapsulated soil, based on X-ray fluorescence (XRF/EDX), unconfined compression strength (UCS), atomic absorption spectrometry (AAS), scanning electron microscopy/energy dispersive X-ray spectrometer (SEM/EDS), and X-ray micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) tests. Although chemical interactions between zinc and lime negatively affected the gains when compared to cement, both encapsulating agents increased the strength over the curing periods of 7, 28, and 60 days. The leachates presented a significant reduction in the contaminant concentration, above 77% for critical experimental conditions. The contaminant reduced the presence of chemical elements that compose the soil matrix, consequently causing the voids to increase; in contrast, pozzolanic reactions promoted by the addition of lime and cement resulted in homogeneous voids distribution, enhancing the mechanical behavior and the capability of zinc chloride retention.

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